º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Professional Services

Why digital bank Zopa chose Manchester for its new base– and why it could create hundreds of new jobs

Zopa CEO says 'availability of tech talent' helped clinch bank's Manchester investment

Zopa Bank CEO, Jaidev Janardana, left, with Greater Manchester Mayor, Andy Burnham, at Zopa's Manchester launch event(Image: Ian Howarth Photography)

Digital bank and billion-dollar ‘unicorn’ Zopa Bank has launched its Manchester base that could one day employ hundreds – and its boss says it was Manchester’s thriving tech scene that attracted it to invest in the city.

Zopa began 20 years ago as a peer-to-peer lending company and launched Zopa Bank in 2020. That bank today has 1.5m customers and has lent out more than £13bn.

The fintech announced this year that it had chosen Manchester as its second º£½ÇÊÓÆµ base. It’s hiring tens of people for its base in Dalton Place, and hopes to grow that to 500 over time.

Zopa launched its Manchester presence today with an event at the People’s History Museum, where metro mayor Andy Burnham hailed its arrival as a “massive vote of confidence in our city region’s digital and tech sector”.

Zopa Bank CEO, Jaidev Janardana, told BusinessLive: “We're growing 30% year on year, and as we continue to grow, we want to make sure that we have access to the right talent pool.

“We serve all of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, so having more offices outside London is helpful. And that's why we're here in Manchester.

“We've got about 50 people on day one, we’re hoping to double that by the end of the year, and hoping to get to 500 over the next two to three years. So that's our ambition here.

“There are a couple of businesses that we actually want to grow here. So we just bought a payments business, called Rvvup, about two to 3 weeks ago. We want to combine that with our point of sale business and offer merchants a better checkout journey, which is better for customers as well. And that business we want to actually grow out of Manchester.